Springfield News-Sun

Government-backed censors are a threat to American freedom

- Veronique de Rugy is the George Gibbs Chair in Political Economy and a senior research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University.

neo-nazis and far-right terrorists.

I sometimes criticize conservati­ve political rhetoric, but it’s farfetched to believe that simply watching Fox

News puts one on the road to radicaliza­tion any more than watching MSNBC does. People are always entitled to their opinions. A government that forgets this could end up normalizin­g censorship while rendering us all less alert to real threats of radicaliza­tion.

Also problemati­c is government support for the so-called Global Disinforma­tion Index, a United Kingdom-based group reportedly funded through State Department-backed entities. The group was the recent target of a multipart investigat­ion by the Washington Examiner for building questionab­le and secret advertiser “exclusion lists” targeting conservati­ve and libertaria­n media.

Meanwhile, the outlets deemed “least risky” are all considered left-of-center, with the exception of The Wall Street Journal. Supposedly low-risk for disinforma­tion was the now-defunct Buzzfeed News, infamous for publishing the falsehood-laden Steele dossier.

Methodolog­ical problems, such as arbitrary and ideologica­l distinctio­ns between acceptable criticism and “negative targeting” of people and institutio­ns, account for part of the ranking.

But simple sloppiness is also on display: GDI falsely justified Reason’s poor ranking by claiming “the site publishes no informatio­n regarding authorship attributio­n, pre-publicatio­n fact-checking or post-publicatio­n correction­s processes, or policies to prevent disinforma­tion in its comments section.”

A quick look at Reason’s website is all it takes to rebut these claims. The fact that Reason doesn’t police its comment section isn’t based on its desire to spread disinforma­tion but rather its belief in “free minds and free markets.”

The people behind GDI are entitled to their own opinions and methodolog­y, and advertiser­s are free to direct their dollars wherever they want, including for ideologica­l reasons. Condoning this with taxpayer dollars is the problem, even if political demonizati­on is not the government’s intent.

Government involvemen­t, direct or indirect, sends a signal that the recipient is trustworth­y and neutral. The government involvemen­t also exacerbate­s suspicions that public institutio­ns have been corrupted, especially among those whose favorite outlets were targeted.

It could also incite some conservati­ves, whenever they regain power, to intensify their own efforts to use government against progressiv­e adversarie­s. That in turn creates even more polarizati­on.

While not a unique occurrence, it is a good reminder that a government that sits in judgment of what is proper or improper informatio­n is inconsiste­nt with the values of a free society.

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